The Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) appeals from an order of the Superior Court in turn affirming a decision by the District of Columbia Public Employees Relations Board (PERB) which sustained an arbitrator’s dismissal of misconduct charges that had resulted in MPD’s discharge of Angela Fisher, an MPD police officer. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the order of the Superior Court.
I.
On April 6, 2001, following a hearing by an MPD Adverse Action Panel, Fisher was discharged for off-duty misconduct in June 1998 in Maryland and for false statements she made to MPD investigators about what had occurred on that date. In accordance with a collective bargaining agreement (the Agreement) between the Fraternal Order of Police (FOP) and MPD, the FOP — on Fisher’s behalf — sought arbitration of the discharge decision. The FOP arguеd, in part, that the MPD panel’s decision had come too late under Article 12, Section 6 of the Agreement. The arbitrator agreed. Without rehearing the evidence or disputing MPD’s findings with respect to the misconduct, he found that “roughly 600 days” had elapsed between when the MPD panel convened to hear the charges against Fisher and when it issued its decision and recommended her discharge, and that this “extraordinary delay beyond the 55-days allowed for the [MPD] to provide [Fisher] a written decision ... clearly violates the mandate of that provi
Section 6 is plainly intended to provide grievant with reasonably prompt notice of her status after charges are preferred against her, unless she waives entitlement to such notice.... [T]he right [Fisher] here asserts was a bargained-for procedural right which created in essence a substantive right[, ... and] failure to issue the decision within the 55 days, as prescribed, must be viewed as harmful error. [Citation and internal quotation marks omitted.]
The effect of the arbitrator’s ruling was to require reinstatement of Fisher with back рay. 2
MPD appealed the arbitrator’s decision to PERB, see D.C.Code § 1-605.02(6) (2001), which affirmed. PERB explained in part:
We have held that an arbitrator’s authority is derived from the parties’ agreement and any applicable statutory and regulatory provision.... In addition, we have held that by agreeing to submit the settlement of a grievance to arbitration, it is the [arbitrator's interpretation, not the Board’s that the parties have bargained for.... MPD ... claims that thе [arbitrator's [a]ward is contrary to law and policy[, but w]e have held that a disagreement with the arbitrator’s interpretation ... does not make the award contrary to law and public policy.... In the present case, MPD’s claims involve only a disagreement with the [arbitrator’s interpretation of Article 12, Section 6 of the [Agreement;] ... MPD has failed to point to any clear or legal рublic policy which the [a]ward contravenes. [Internal citations, quotation marks, and brackets omitted.]
On MPD’s petition for review of PERB’s decision in the Superior Court, that court affirmed, agreeing with PERB “that an arbitrator ... act[s] within [his] authority by imposing a penalty upon MPD [for violation of Article 12, Section 6] without first making a finding of harmfulness.”
This appeal followed.
II.
Although MPD argued before the arbitrator and PERB that it had not violated Article 12, Section 6 of the Agreement, it no longer makes that argument. Furthermore, as it must, MPD concedes
MPD points first to what it terms the “universally recognized” command that prejudice be shown (or that a party be allowed to show
no
resulting prejudice) before a procedural error is determined to require reversal. Starting from the statutory harmless error rule that governs review proceedings in federal courts and this court,
3
MPD moves closer to the issue at hand by citing the Supreme Court’s recognition in
Cornelius v. Nutt,
No such statutory language or history governs this case. The Comprehensive Merit Personnel Act (CMPA), D.C.Code § 1-601.01
et seq.
(2001), regulates public employee labor-management relations in the District of Columbia, and, as MPD concedes, the CMPA contains no provision requiring harmful (or harmless) error analysis before reversal of erroneous agency action is permitted. Neither do PERB’s rules impose such a review standard on itself or on arbitrators aсting un
MPD fares no better in citing to the principle that courts regularly hold provisions such as Article 12, Section 6 imposing time limits on agency action to be “directory, rather than mandatory” (Br. for MPD at 12), such that relief for a breach requires a showing of prejudice from the delay.
See, e.g., In re Morrell,
When construction of the contract implicitly or directly requires an application of “external law,” ie., statutory or decisional law [such as the mandatory-directory distinction MPD cites], the parties have necessarily bargained for the arbitrator’s interpretation of the law and are bound by it. Since the arbitrator is the “contract reader,” his interpretatiоn of the law becomes part of the contract and thereby part of the private law governing the relationship between the parties to the contract.
Am. Postal Workers v. United States Postal Serv.,
252 U.S.App. D.C. 169, 174,
MPD’s final argument appears directed to the “contrary to ... public policy” limitation of § 1-605.02(6). It cites “the strong public interest in insuring the competence and honesty of public employees, especially armed police officers,” and argues that “[m]ere delay” by the police panel should “not [be] enough for a person to escape the consequences of her misconduct” without a showing of prejudice to her ability to defend the charges (Br. for MPD at 15). But while no one disputes the importance of this governmental interest, the question remains whether it suffices to invoke the
“extremely narrow’’
public policy exception to enforcement of arbitrator awards.
Am. Postal Workers,
252 U.S.App. D.C. at 176,
MPD, as we have seen, can point to no “laws and legal precedents” preventing an arbitrator from construing Article 12, Section 6 to dispense with an inquiry into prejudice from noncompliance. MPD’s concern that this interpretation will leave unfit police officers on the job because of technical agency errors, besides resembling a “general consideration[] of ... public interests” inadequate to impeach an award, seems to us exaggerated for several reasons. First, the provision itself,
see
note 1,
supra,
— сarefully articulated in a way that suggests the product of deliberate give-and-take collective bargaining— does not make the 55-day limit absolute; rather, the deadline can be waived in particular circumstances by employee request or “agree[ment].” Second, more importantly, a close reading of the arbitrator’s decision here leaves doubtful that he would hоld
any
violation of the provision to bar disciplinary action by MPD. The delay was, he stated, “extraordinary,” considering that “roughly 600 days” had elapsed between the beginning and end of the evidentiary hearing — a delay marked by “six continuances,” only one of which the employee had sought. It is not obvious from this language that the arbitrator would have accorded the same legal significance to a far lesser, and arguably technical, breach of the 55-day provision. Finally, and equally important, PERB has made clear in its brief to the court that it does not regard the arbitrator’s interpretation here as binding on another arbitrator in another case, even construing the same paragraph.
See
Br. for PERB at 30 n. 8 (“[I]n bargaining for an arbitrator to make findings of fact and to interpret the Agreement, the parties chose a forum that is not bound by precedent. Arbitration decisions do not create binding precedent even when based on the same collective bargaining agreement.
See, e.g., Hotel Ass’n of Washington, D.C., Inc. v. Hotel & Restaurant Employees Union, Local 25,
[295 U.S.App. D.C. 285, 286-88,]
For all of these reasons, we find no basis on which to reverse PERB’s decision sustaining the arbitrator’s award, ’and its order consequently requiring that Officer Fisher be reinstated with back pay.
So ordered.
SCHWELB, Senior Judge, concurring in the judgment:
I concur in the judgment because, as the court points out, “roughly 600 days had elapsed between the beginning and end of the еvidentiary hearing — a delay marked by six continuances, only one of which the employee had sought,” and because the ruling might plausibly be construed as turning on this fact. If the MPD panel’s written decision had been issued within 56 days, instead of about 600, and if reinstatement with back pay had nevertheless been ordered by the arbitrator, by the PERB, and by the trial court, I might well conclude otherwise. Contracts must be cоnstrued to avoid irrational results, and an interpretation of the collective bargaining agreement in this case as meaning that the slightest imperfection in the process requires the reinstatement of an officer, however culpable, with back pay, notwith
The case is admittedly difficult for, as the majority points out, the parties bargained for a decision by the arbitrator, and that is what they got. At some point, however, a ruling even by an arbitrator becomes so unreasonable that its enforcement would be contrary to public policy. I am prepared to agree with the court that this point has not been reached on the facts before us, for the decision of the MPD panel was issued roughly a year and a half later than the collective bargaining agreement required. To the extent, however, that the arbitrator’s analysis in this case can be construed as applying even to any failure to comply with the 55-day limit, no matter how minor, and notwithstanding the lack of any prejudicе, it has come pretty close to the line between legitimate arbitration and irrational dispropor-tionality, and may even have crossed that line.
Notes
. Article 12, Section 6 of the Agreement states:
The employee shall be given a written decision and the reasons therefore no later than fifty-five (55) days after the date the charges are preferred or the date the employee elects to have a departmental hearing, where applicable, except that:
(a) when an employee requests and is granted a postponement or continuance of a scheduled hearing, the fifty-five (55) day time limit shall be extended by the length of the delay or continuance, as well as the number of days consumed by the hearing;
(b) when the employee requests and is granted an extension of the time allotted for answering the notice of proposed action, the fifty-five (55) day time limit shall be extended by the length of the extension of time; and
(c)when the employee agrees to an extension of time requested by the agency, the fifty-five (55) day time limit shall be extended by the length of the extension of time.
. The arbitrator also found that the MPD panel had violated Fisher’s due process rights by unduly limiting her ability to cross-examine two witnesses at the hearing. In view of our disposition of this appeal, we have no occasion to consider PERB’s affirmance of that part of the arbitrator's ruling as well, for in the arbitrator’s judgment the "violation alone” of the 55-day rule required "the proceeding against [Fisher to be] dismissed as without cause.”
. See 28 U.S.C. § 2111; D.C.Code § 11-721(e) (2001).
. Indeed, no one disputed in
Cornelius
“that the [statutory] harmful-error rule applies to an arbitration as well as to a proceeding before the Board”; rather the employee-grievants "contend[ed only] that the rule should be interpreted differently in the two contexts.”
Cornelius,
. This court looks for guidance to court decisions interpreting analogous federal labor-management relations law.
See, e.g., Gibson
v.
District of Columbia Pub. Employee Relations Bd.,
. In my opinion, the arbitrator’s ruling that the limits placed by the MPD on cross-examination constituted an independent basis for requiring reinstatement with back pay, Maj. op., ante, note 2, was unreasonable.
